Both ENDS

News / 2 February 2026

Response to the D66-VVD-CDA coalition agreement

Coalition: Repair the damage and dare to go further

 

At Both ENDS, we see a number of cautious steps in the right direction in this coalition agreement. There is a slight emphasis on green issues, renewed attention to women's rights, recognition of the importance of civil society, and discussion of trade agreements with a focus on mutual interests. However, without structural change in how we trade, invest, and cooperate, fine words remain empty shells.

 

No matter how appealing these plans may sound, they fall short of what is really needed: a reversal of the previous cabinet's destructive policies and systemic change focused on the long term. The damage done to international solidarity is far from being repaired. National (trade) interests seem to outweigh solidarity as a building block for stability and international partnerships. The commitment of an additional €257 million for development cooperation pales in comparison to the previous cabinet's €2.4 billion in cuts. Moreover, this agreement lacks a systemic change. The proposals remain mere band-aids on deep wounds: the climate crisis, global inequality, the increasing number of authoritarian regimes, and the geopolitical changes unfolding before our eyes.

 

How can the incoming cabinet translate the words of the coalition agreement into structural change with genuine ambitions?

Three steps towards those ambitions:

 

Real climate action goes further.

Millions of people worldwide are being hit hard by climate change. Countries that are responsible for this climate change have pledged to make more money available for these millions of people. Therefore, use public funds to finance locally supported climate solutions. This way, the support will go to the people who need it most, but who also own the solutions. At the same time, you will be making a real contribution to regional stability.

 

Fair trade with backbone.

Equality starts with daring. Put human rights and climate first in partnerships, trade agreements, and investments, even if that is uncomfortable. Make room for food security, even if that means market protection. Put justice first in the energy transition, so that it does not reinforce inequality. Listen to the countries you want to trade with and look at what investments are really needed—this also means listening to what women's groups, young people, and farmers there want. Moreover, the Netherlands will never be able to compete globally on price, but it can compete on quality and reliability. Position the Netherlands as a reliable, long-term trading partner with which a fair energy, food, and climate transition can be driven forward.

 

Stand up for democracy and human rights – especially now.

With autocrats gaining ground worldwide, this is the perfect opportunity for the Netherlands to show what we stand for. Support the champions of democracy and human rights worldwide, not only with words, but with real resources. Support women in standing up for their rights, communities in rolling out proven climate solutions, and strengthen the voice of civil society. Women, young people, communities... they know exactly what is needed – let that be our guide. Dutch civil society organizations also play a role in supporting human rights worldwide and ensuring that their voices are heard by Dutch and European governments, politicians, and businesses.

 

Only then can we finally get started on that modern aid and trade agenda.

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